Reclaiming American Cities: The Struggle for People, Place, and Nature since 1900

Reclaiming American Cities: The Struggle for People, Place, and Nature since 1900

by Rutherford H. Platt
Reclaiming American Cities: The Struggle for People, Place, and Nature since 1900

Reclaiming American Cities: The Struggle for People, Place, and Nature since 1900

by Rutherford H. Platt

Paperback(First Edition)

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Overview

For most of the past century, urban America was dominated by top-down policies serving the white business and cultural elite, the suburbs, and the automobile. At times these approaches were fiercely challenged by reformers such as Jane Addams and Jane Jacobs. Yet by the 1980s, mainstream policies had resulted in a nation of ravaged central cities, sprawling suburbs, social and economic polarization, and incalculable environmental damage.

In the 1990s, this entrenched model finally yielded to change as local citizens, neighborhood groups, and other stakeholders, empowered by a spate of new laws and policies, began asserting their own needs and priorities. Though hampered by fiscal crises and internal disagreements, these popular initiatives launched what the author terms a new era of "humane urbanism" marked by a determination to make cities and suburbs greener, healthier, safer, more equitable, more efficient, and generally more people-friendly. In the process, the mayors, architects, engineers, and bureaucrats who had previously dominated urban policy found themselves relegated to supporting roles.

As Rutherford H. Platt points out, humane urbanism can take many forms, from affordable housing and networks of bike paths to refurbished waterfronts and urban farms. Often spontaneous, low-tech, and self-sustaining programs, their shared goal is to connect people to one another and to bring nature back into the city. Reclaiming American Cities examines both sides of this historic transformation: the long struggle against patricians and technocrats of earlier decades and the recent sprouting of grassroots efforts to make metropolitan America more humane and sustainable.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781625340504
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Publication date: 12/23/2013
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.10(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Rutherford H. Platt is professor emeritus of geography at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Among his publications are The Ecological City: Preserving and Restoring Urban Biodiversity (University of Massachusetts Press, 1994) and The Humane Metropolis: People and Nature in the 21st-Century City (University of Massachusetts Press, 2006). The fourth edition of his textbook Land Use and Society: Geography, Law, and Public Policy will be released in 2014.

Table of Contents

Preface ix

Introduction: A Train Journey into the Past and Future 1

Part I The Patrician Decades, 1900-1940 11

1 American Cities in 1900: A Patchwork of Silk and Rags 15

2 Competing Visions in the Progressive Era 32

Part II The Technocrat Decades, 1945-1990 61

3 The Central City Renewal Engine 67

4 The Suburban Sprawl Engine 97

5 Battling the Bulldozer: The Indiana Dunes and Other Sacred Places 115

6 Legacies of Sprawl: A Witch's Brew 131

Part III The (More) Humane Decades, 1990-Present 153

7 Replanting Urbanism in the 1990s: A Garden of Acronyms 157

8 New Age "Central Parks": Two Grand Slams and a Single 189

9 Reclaiming Urban Waterways: One Stream at a Time 203

10 Humane Urbanism at Ground Level 223

Epilogue 249

Notes 251

Further Reading 285

Index 287

What People are Saying About This

Alex Marshall

A sophisticated, thorough, and comprehensive history of city planning in the United States over the last 125 years.

Jennifer Wolch

Platt's book offers a breathtaking historical sweep of attempts to shape the physical and social organization of U.S. cities-and why some of them succeeded while many others failed. Bringing us right up to the present through an impressive number of detailed examples, Reclaiming American Cities powerfully demonstrates how fresh approaches and place-based movements are making our communities more humane, livable, and sustainable.

Eric W. Sanderson

Each generation remakes the city in its own image. The past provides the problem and the future provides the opportunity. Rutherford Platt's excellent new book provides a perspective, literally a viewpoint, from which to see and contemplate the American urban landscape, and the people and ideas that have shaped it over the last century. Highly recommended!

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